Research Catalog
Discourse analysis : the sociolinguistic analysis of natural language
- Title
- Discourse analysis : the sociolinguistic analysis of natural language / Michael Stubbs.
- Author
- Stubbs, Michael, 1947-
- Publication
- Chicago : University of Chicago Press ; Oxford [Oxfordshire] : B. Blackwell, 1983.
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Status | Format | Access | Call Number | Item Location |
---|---|---|---|---|
Not available - Please for assistance. | Text | Use in library | P302 .S77 1983 | Off-site |
Details
- Description
- xii, 272 pages; 23 cm
- Series Statement
- Language in society ; 4
- Uniform Title
- Language in society (Oxford, England) ; 4.
- Subject
- Note
- Includes indexes.
- Bibliography (note)
- Bibliography: p. [249]-265.
- Contents
- Machine derived contents note: Acknowledgements Notational Conventions Part One -- Introduction 1. Discourse Analysis: A Programmatic Introduction 1. Language, action, knowledge and situation 2. The impossibility of discourse analysis? 3. Discourse analysis and linguistics 4. Discourse analysis and sociolinguistics 5. Terminology 6. Idealization 7. The state of the art 8. The organization of the book Part Two -- Approaches to Discourse Analysis 2. On Speaking Terms: Inspecting Conversational Data 1. Discourse organization 2. Inspecting transcribed data 3. Some observations on the data 4. Narratiev organization 5. Interactional roles 6. Discourse analysis and interaction 7. Narrative structure 8. Natural conversation 9. Native speaker fluency 10. Conclusions 11. Data appendix 3. On the Same Wavelength: Analysing Ethnographic Data 1. Some initial observations 2. Data collection 3. Problems of perception 4. Communicative problems in the classrooms 5. Sociolinguistics and language variation 6. Language functions 7. Metacommunicative acts 8. Monitoring classroom talk 9. Two descriptive rules of language use 10. Limitations on the analysis 11. The hidden curriculum or medium as message 12. Object language and metalanguage 4. On a Different Level: Particles, Adverbs and Connectors 1. Well 2. Adverbs 3. Please 4. Tests for speech acts 5. Pragmatic connectors 6. Conclusions Part Three -- Exchange Structure 5. A Linguistic Approach to Discourse: Structures and Well-Formedness 1. A linguistic approach to discourse 2. Predictability and well-formedness 3. Phonotactics 4. Grammaticality 5. Intuitions about discourse sequences 6. Predictability 7. Predictability and idealization 8. Structure controls meaning 9. Canonical discourse and idealization 10. Analogies 11. Conclusions 6. Imitations and Responses 1. Questions 2. Yes-no questions 3. X-questions 4. An initial definition of exchange 5. Yes and no 6. Observational studies of yes and no 7. A-, B- and AB-events 8. Truth and certainty 9. Knowledge and beliefs 10. Actives and passives 11. Conclusions 7. Analysing Exchange Structure 1. Theory, methodology and data 2. Well-formedness in discourse 3. Notational conventions 4. Research on exchange structure 5. Sinclair's work on discourse 6. Basic discourse categories 7. Analysis of complete interchange 8. Tests for +/- initial 9. Some candidate analysis 10. Eliciting informants' intuitions on discourse 11. Concluding comments Part Four -- Surface Cohesion and Underlying Coherence 8. Beneath the Surface of Discourse: Indirection in Speech Acts 1. Austin: utterances as actions 2. Discourse acts and speech acts 3. Austin's theory of speech acts 4. Identifying speech acts 5. Speech acts and social roles 6. Problems for hearers and readers 7. Finding the answer 8. Motivating underlying acts 9. Conclusions 9. On the Surface of Discourse: Prefaces and Alignments 1. The indirection argument 2. Limitations on idealized data 3. Formulating turns at talk 4. Prefaces 5. Alignments 6. Acknowledge, accept and endorse 7. Conclusion 10. Stir until the Plot Thickens: The Propositional Analysis of Text 1. A method for investigating narrative structure 2. Literary competence 3. Propositions in stories 4. The concepts of plot and summary 5. The semantic analysis of plots 6. Propositions, entailments and presuppositions 7. Existential presuppositions: or how to tell jokes 8. Co-reference: on cat or two 9. Entailments and implications: or how to tell lies 10. Maxims of quantity 11. Implications 12. Summary 13. The sociolinguistic analysis of literary language 14. Propositional analysis 15. Presuppositions Part Five -- Methodology 11. Collecting Conversational Data: Notes on Sociolinguistic Methodology 1. The lack of accepted procedures in discourse analysis 2. Labov and sociolinguistic methodology 3. Practical problems 4. How much data? 5. Theoretical biases in recording 6. Theoretical biases in transcription 7. Field notes 8. Theoretical sampling 9. Triangulation 10. The problem of perception 11. An illustration 12. Conclusions Further Reading References Name Index Subject Index.
- ISBN
- 0226778320
- 9780226778327
- 0226778339
- 9780226778334
- 0631103813
- 9780631103813
- LCCN
- 83005900
- OCLC
- ocm09392863
- 9392863
- SCSB-83912
- Owning Institutions
- Princeton University Library